Romney Right About Obama's Gifts To Special Groups

Election Postmortem: Some in the GOP have taken to trashing 2012 presidential candidate Mitt Romney for recent comments he made about his loss. We can't say we agree with the criticisms, since what Romney said is true.

Here's the comment that seems to have riled the Republican elite: "The president's campaign," said Romney, "focused on giving targeted groups a big gift — so he made a big effort on small things. Those small things, by the way, add up to trillions of dollars."

Yes, that could hurt the GOP further with solidly Democratic groups that many in the party of the elephant continue to believe are "natural Republicans." But Romney spoke the plain, unvarnished truth.

Using the divide-and-conquer tactics of Saul Alinsky, Obama successfully exploited age, income, class, race and ethnic divisions to the detriment of Republicans, while smearing Romney as an uncaring, rapacious Wall Street capitalist who murdered a steel worker's wife.

But sure, GOP, pile on Romney, who also remarked that Obama was "very generous" to African Americans, Hispanics and young voters. So why does this offend? It's so obviously true it shouldn't need defending.

Obama bought young Americans' votes by offering to forgive student loans, letting them stay on their parents' health insurance until they're 26 and giving free contraception under ObamaCare to the hook-up generation.

Obama played racial politics with African Americans, too. Both he and Vice President Joe Biden at various times during the campaign suggested Republicans want to take America back to the days of segregation.

Vile stuff, but it worked. Obama got 79% of the minority vote and more than 93% of the black vote, though by nearly any objective measure — unemployment, family income, poverty — minorities are worse off under Obama than under former President Bush.

As for Hispanics, even former GOP Commerce Secretary and Romney adviser Carlos Gutierrez complained Romney had damaged the GOP brand by his comments.

For the record, since 1986, there've been at least six amnesties affecting literally millions of illegal immigrants. Today, we have as many as 20 million here, with most on some form of welfare, Census data show.

This goes deeper than racial politics. Can any nation that doesn't keep its borders and ignores its own laws continue to exist? The answer, of course, is no.

No, conservatives shouldn't oppose "reaching out" to these and other groups based on beliefs in hard work, family, faith and free markets. Those are bedrocks. But a party that panders and forgets its principles isn't a party at all, but an election machine.

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